Obama's Moral Cowardice
Robert Manne on asylum seekers and the Left's failure
The perils of holding the balance of power
Metroid: Other M
As it Happens
WWII Vet Talks about the Power of Music
PIRACY ON THE HIGH SEAS
Eight days ago, Israeli Naval Forces attacked and boarded the Free Gaza Movement vessel, the SPIRIT OF HUMANITY, 23 miles off the coast of Gaza, abducting 21 human rights workers from 11 countries.

This outrageous violation of international law was not considered by newsworthy mainstream media. The Boat held humanitarian and reconstruction supplies to be given to the people of Gaza, who remain trapped, isolated and starved by the Israeli blockade. It is not the first lawless boarding of a humanitarian aid vessel by Israeli, as you will discover in this remarkable video.

Last week Rupert Murdoch's master of fairy tales and spin, Richard Hartigan, told the compliant Canberra Press Club that his master's organs are fully focussed on ferreting our the truth, righting wrongs, making the world a safer place for tycoons, etc, and that bloggers are basically liars, fantasists and criminals. Well, at least he didn't say war criminals, a term appropriate to those who endorse illegal invasions that kill over a million citizens. (Strangely, when Murdoch attended Davos in 2007, he was asked by an interviewer if News Corp had managed to shape the agenda on the war in Iraq. His answer?

"No, I don't think so. We tried." How about that John Hartigan? YOU TRIED. A fact noy mentioned to the press club. In fact, your papers probably didn't even report it. http://www.newscorpse.com/ncWP/index.php?p=341

Bloggers flourish because mainstream media manipulates the news and tries to create a one sided view of "reality", whatever that term means. To this day, Murdoch's papers understate civilian casualties in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. To this day, Murdoch's papers have failed to question the repeated use of drones to assassinate suspects, with dire results for the innocent. To this day, the Murdoch papers will panic about teenage pirates in Somalia, but dare not report the antics of the vicious buccaneers of Israel.

Comments

Please log in to leave a comment.
You need to have been a member for 24 hours and validated your email before leaving a comment.
 
Reflections on Gaza from Tel Aviv
13 jan  |  The assault on Gaza started on Saturday morning, December 27th. In the early afternoon some activists used emails and text messaging to call for a demonstration in downtown Tel Aviv. Almost 2,000 people gather that evening in front of the cinemateque and then walked to the defense ministry compound. Almost every day since there has been a demonstration somewhere, in both Arab and Jewish sectors (including demonstrations at four of the five Israeli universities), but the media report almost only about Arab demonstrations... . . read more
Shooting Back - From Peter Beaumont
2 aug  |  An Israeli child from a far-right settler group in the West Bank city of Hebron hurls a stone up the stairs of a Palestinian family close to their settlement and shouts: "I will exterminate you." Another spits towards the same family. Another settler woman pushes her face up to a window and snarls: "Whore!"

They are shocking images. There is footage of beatings, their aftermath, and the indifference of Israel's security forces to serious human rights abuses. There is footage too of those same security forces humiliating Palestinians – and most seriously – committing abuses themselves.

They are contained in a growing archive of material assembled by the Israeli human rights organisation B'Tselem in a remarkable project called Shooting Back. The group has supplied almost 100 video cameras to vulnerable Palestinian communities in Hebron, the northern West Bank and elsewhere, to document and gather evidence of assaults and abusive behaviour – largely by settlers. [Read more and see video] . . read more

Enough. It's boycott time
12 jan  |  By Naomi Klein

It's time. Long past time. The best strategy to end the increasingly bloody occupation is for Israel to become the target of the kind of global movement that put an end to apartheid in South Africa. In July 2005 a huge coalition of Palestinian groups laid out plans to do just that. They called on "people of conscience all over the world to impose broad boycotts and implement divestment initiatives against Israel similar to those applied to South Africa in the apartheid era". The campaign Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions was born. . . read more

Santa's Ghetto 2007
18 dec  |  Santa's Ghetto is probably the world's most low-concept art event.  This year its in a former chicken shop on Manger Square in Bethlehem opposite the Church of the Nativity (where Santa Claus was actually born). . . read more
Under Siege
30 jan  |  UnderSiege - the story of the Palestinian occupation . . read more
The Dead Piled on Top of Each Other By Sami Abdel-Shafi in Gaza City
30 dec  |  I am safe, and yet I feel like a walking dead person. Everything around me shows it. It is hard to write something of any coherence while exposed to cold winter air and to the smell that lingers after the detonation of Israeli bombs. They must have been massive. . . read more
"An Earthquake On Top of Your Head" The Bombing of Gaza - By Dr. Eyad Al Serraj
30 dec  |  The bombing went on for about 10 minutes. It was like an earthquake on top of your head. The windows were shaking and squeaking. My 10-year-old was terrified, he was jumping from one place to another trying to hide. I held him tight to my chest and tried to give him some security and reassure him. My 12-year-old was panicking and began laughing hysterically, it's not normal. I held her hand and calmed her and told her she would be safe. My wife was panicking. She was running around the apartment looking for somewhere to hide. 

We live on the ground floor so we headed to the basement. 

Not very far from our home is the headquarters of the police and there was a massive bomb. The chief of police was killed. Two streets away there was another bomb and more people were killed. The office of the president is about one kilometre from our house and it was also bombed. 

We went downstairs to the basement and tried to hide ourselves from the shelling. The child of one of our relatives, who lives in our building, finally came home from school. We hadn't been able to find her. All the phone connections were jammed. She came home and she was in a very serious state of shock. She was pale and trembling and she was describing dead bodies in the streets. On her way home she passed Hamas people in uniform and they were dead. 

I had been very apprehensive when I woke up this morning. I had some bread, some cheese and a glass of tea. Like all the people in Gaza I felt that something was going on and something very serious. When Israel allowed the delivery of food and fuel [when it ended the blockade of Gaza yesterday] I said to myself and my friends that Israel is really planning a massive strike. They don't want to be blamed for starving the people. 

I was sitting in the living room with my family trying to figure out what to do today for lunch, it's our main meal. What to cook and how to cook, whether we have enough to eat. There was no rice so I wanted to have lentil soup and my wife said "No, there's no lentils in the market." I said "What else can we do?" She said "I bought some cans of food." We were discussing this when suddenly the whole thing erupted. Suddenly there was a big explosion. 

Right now I feel very anxious about what's going to happen. I'm worried about how many more people are going to die. 

Dr Eyad Al Serraj is a practising psychologist in Gaza City.  . . read more

Gaza's Invisible Terror
19 apr  |  Gaza's Invisible Terror . . read more
A Background to Middle East Peace
24 sep  |  There have been many paths to peace in the Middle East over the past few decades but no roadmap has led to a lasting solution.  . . read more
blogs   100words
 
By Sean Maguire

Obama 'ends' the Iraq war while body bags continue to pile up, Tony Blair weeps for the dead but refuses to apologise, Australians continue to fight in Afghanistan to secure a shaky government while Australia's shaky government fights for relevance.
 
With even our most inspirational politicians failing us, what is the point in having the audacity to hope?

Can we still be stupid enough to believe our problems will be magically solved for us?

And with the world stagnating in war, environmental collapse and economic inequalty has there ever been a better time for anarchy?